WMLC News Letter Dec, 2006

We have planned many fun and exciting social activities during the month of December.

WMLC News Letter Jan 07, 2006

We hope your new year is off to a wonderful start!

WMLC News Letter Nov 22, 2005

We hope your fall season has been wonderful and that you will have much

WMLC News Letter March 2005

Asperger Syndrome Presentation - Speaker: Dr Elizabeth Reeve, Child Psychiatry

 

descriptions

New Clients: 

Generally, all new clients ages 4-11 start out by taking “Catching on to Getting Along.”

Clients ages 12+ generally take “Tweens/Teens Talk & Tweens/Teens Rock.”

However, we offer over thirty options.  Please see Catalog on Downloads Page for further descriptions.

“Catching on to Getting Along”

The seemingly simple, yet, in practice, very complex art of getting along with others is a set of skills that enriches everyone’s life and provides for the personal satisfaction of social success.

Basic to getting along with others are social interaction skills that initiate and sustain contact effectively.  Along with lessons on introducing oneself, inviting others to play, joining others at play, sharing, apologizing and accepting apologies, offering to help, and giving and receiving compliments, “Catching on to Getting Along” helps participants understand appropriate eye contact and body placement, maintaining focus, shifting attention focus, sustaining joint attention, and understanding others’ perspectives.

Daily Routine:  Begin with a sensory start (swing, steamroll, and deep pressure) in the Sensory Room.  Move to the Friendship Room where we use a visual schedule, do a feeling check-in with feelings cubes, lesson (sometimes a social skills video or role play and work in notebooks), have a snack, and earn positive reinforcement points using a group marble jar.  Then, enjoy therapeutic recreation activities with guided play (air hockey, ping pong, board games, parachute, bounce house...) to expand upon and promote generalization of the lessons’ goals.  End with support circle and the good-bye song.  A feedback sheet showing reminders and comments is provided and client’s may take their notebooks home or share them with their school or therapists, etc.

Goals:

Participants will increase skills in the following areas:

* Sustaining joint attention with peers on activities they choose and on activities a peer chooses.

* Sustaining appropriate eye contact and body placement during communication and interactions with peers and adults.

* Shifting attention and focus among subjects, activities, and thoughts.

* Introducing self to peers and adults.

* Starting and sustaining reciprocal conversations with peers and adults; Ending conversations.

* Demonstrating caring for peers by sharing, taking turns, asking and answering questions, and helping.

* Offering and giving help in appropriate ways and managing feelings and behaviors when the offer is declined.

* Recognizing when an apology is needed and making apologies to peers and adults in appropriate ways.

* Giving and accepting compliments.

“TWEENS/TEENS TALK & ROCK”

1 hr. “classroom” instruction time with 1 ˝ - 4 hrs. of Therapeutic Recreation to reinforce skills and promote generalization

            Along with Addressing Individual IEP goals, During Tweens/Teens Talk, Participants will:

    • Increase their communication skills related to solving problems in their social, school, and home lives
    • Develop understanding and motivation for caring what others think
    • Increase their social thinking (social cognition), including, but not limited to:
      • Taking Perspective
      • Taking Initiative
      • Being a Good Listener
      • Abstracting and Inferring
      • Gestalt (“big picture”) Thinking

·         Increase awareness of behaviors that need changing

·         Increase skills related to self-monitoring behaviors

·         Increase skills related to self-control of  behaviors

(Tweens/Teens Talk will follow the curriculum “Inside Out:  What Makes a Person with Social Cognitive Deficits Tick?” written by Michelle Garcia Winner, “The Hidden Curriculum” by Brenda Smith Myles, “Relationship Development Intervention” by Steven Gutstein, “Room 28” from LinguiSystems, et al, social skills games and videos and more.)

            During Tweens/Teens Rock, Participants will:

·         Practice skills they learn in Tweens/Teens Talk in facilitated social activities

·         Demonstrate increasing ability to think about others during facilitated social activities

·         Demonstrate increasing motivation to interact with others, peers and group leaders           

·         Increase in comfort level and skills necessary for successful participation in a variety of activities

·         Increase in skills related to accepting and benefiting from others’ feedback                      

·         Develop increasing independence in a variety of social situations and activities

 

 

West Metro Learning Connections, Inc. - 355 Second Street - Excelsior, MN 55331

© West Metro Learning Connections. 2000

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